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Tiemoue Bakayoko could be in line for an early return to Chelsea after a poor start to his loan spell with AC Milan

AC Milan boss Gennaro Gattuso has opened up on Tiemoue Bakayoko’s difficult start to the season, amid reports the Chelsea midfielder could have his season-long loan deal with the Serie A side cut short.

The 24-year-old was shipped out on loan by the Blues in the summer after an underwhelming first season in the Premier League following his big money arrival from Monaco.

Chelsea manager Maurizio Sarri, who arrived at Stamford Bridge in July, replaced Bakayoko by bringing in Jorginho from former side Napoli, whilst he also secured a loan deal for Real Madrid midfielder Mateo Kovacic.

Bakayoko’s misery has continued, with the Frenchman yet to start a league game for the Rossoneri this season.

Gattuso has admitted that the midfielder is struggling from a lack of confidence and has also hinted that he’d have preferred to see his side add a more experienced midfielder to their squad in the summer.

“Bakayoko has to learn how to get the ball,” said Gattuso. 

“We must work correctly. It will not be easy.

“One week is not enough to remove the defects of a player. I would have preferred to be managing older, more experienced club players.”

It is not the first time Gattuso has had to discuss this midfielder as thus far Bakayoko has made only six appearances for Milan, including just two starts, both of which came in the Europa League.

Reports in Italy over the weekend suggested that Gattuso’s side could even be tempted to bring an early end to his loan deal if there is no improvement in his performances.

Big things were expected of the midfielder after he signed for the Blues from Monaco in July 2017.

He signed a five-year contract with the club following a season where he played a crucial part in Monaco’s Ligue 1 winning campaign, with the French side also reaching the Champions League semi-finals in the same season.

Milan have the option to sign Bakayoko on a permanent basis when his loan deal expires, but that appears to be unlikely at this stage.

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The Blancos are on the cusp of reversing their flagging fortunes, according to under-fire head coach who has seen his position called into question

Julen Lopetegui insists Real Madrid cannot afford to dwell on their woeful run of form and is continuing to ignore speculation over his future as head coach.

Madrid return to domestic action against Levante on Saturday after the international break looking to halt a run of four straight games in all competitions without a win, in which they have failed to score a goal.

It is their worst drought in front of goal since 1985 and has already led to suggestions that Lopetegui, who was appointed as Zinedine Zidane’s successor in June, is facing the axe at the Santiago Bernabeu.

But Lopetegui has seen enough from his team to remain convinced Madrid can get out of their rut and is not planning on signing players as a solution.

“No [we don’t need to sign players], I think the solution is in every game. I’m completely confident in players and the squad we’ve got, I think we’ll have a great season,” he told a news conference. 

“There is a long way to go in everything, I think we’re close to arriving at one of the peaks you have in the season, we’ll be very strong very soon.

“I think we’ll have a great season and we’re focused to face a complicated opponent who are in great form. We can’t look back, we can only look forward.”

Asked if the players were anxious about their poor form in front of goal, Lopetegui replied: “We’ll just try to do what we try to do and focus on our play. We’re not worried about the record or anything, we just have to create chances and take them, that’s the best way we can be in this game.”

Madrid’s latest defeat, a late 1-0 reverse at Deportivo Alaves, saw the pressure crank up a notch on Lopetegui, who was forced to insist he did not fear for his job.

And the former Spain boss does not believe focusing on aspects outside of his control will help the team.

He said: “I’m not worried about what people are saying, I’m not taking much notice. We’re worried about Levante and ourselves, like who’s fit and who isn’t – the rest is not in my control, so I try not to take too much notice. It doesn’t help us win if I take notice of that.”

Lopetegui was asked if his plans had changed given Madrid’s struggles and the 52-year-old said it is inevitable that a coach must adapt during the course of a season.

“Plans change all the time, you have to keep evolving, keep changing things. You go into a season knowing what you’ve got and change when circumstances come along,” he said. 

“I keep believing in what we’re doing well and try to change certain aspects, but that’s no different to any other team.

“We’re at a point where there are question marks over every team in every competition, nothing is decided and there is a long way to go.”

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Simon Cheng, a staff member of Britain’s consulate in Hong Kong, who has been detained by Chinese authorities in the neighboring mainland city of Shenzhen, is seen in an unknown location in this undated photo obtained from the Facebook page “Free Simon Cheng.”

China’s Foreign Ministry has confirmed that an employee of Britain’s Hong Kong consulate was detained nearly two weeks ago during a business trip to the mainland.

Although consulate officials suspected he’d been detained by Chinese authorities, Cheng’s exact whereabouts had been unknown to family and friends since he disappeared on Aug. 8 in Shenzhen, a city in China’s Guangdong province just across the border from Hong Kong.

China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang, speaking at a daily briefing, said that the consulate employee had been given 15 days of “administrative detention” by Chinese authorities and was being held in Shenzhen for violating unspecified security regulations.

He gave no further details, but if Cheng was detained on Aug. 8, it could mean that he would be freed in the coming days.

In a Facebook post on Wednesday, Cheng’s family said he had not been seen since his trip to Shenzhen. “We lost contact with him since then,” the family wrote. “We feel very helpless and are worried sick about Simon. We hope Simon can return to Hong Kong as soon as possible.”

Weeks of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, a former British colony that was handed back to China in 1997, have raised tensions between Beijing and London.

The protests, which began on June 9, were sparked by anger over a proposed extradition law that would have allowed some Hong Kong residents to be sent to mainland China to face justice there.

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Hong Kong’s government has since backed off the law, but protesters have kept up their demonstrations, insisting that the bill be entirely withdrawn. They have also added new demands for a more transparent and open government and to investigate alleged police brutality during a crackdown on the demonstrations.

Geng, who acknowledged that Cheng is a Hong Kong resident, told reporters that because he is a citizen of China, his detention is an internal matter. The comment appeared to signal that even without the extradition law, China sees Hong Kong as being under its laws and regulations.

In the early days of the pro-democracy protests, Britain’s Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt – who has since resigned — stressed the U.K.’s support for freedoms in Hong Kong which were meant to be guaranteed by a “one country, two systems” philosophy embodied in the 1997 handover agreement.

Hunt’s successor, Dominic Raab, went further, telephoning Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, to condemn police violence against the protesters and to call for an independent investigation of their actions – a move that was not well received in Beijing.

“It is simply wrong for the British government to directly call Hong Kong’s chief executive to exert pressure,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said at the time.

It wasn’t clear whether Cheng’s detention had anything to do with London’s show of support for the protesters, but Geng, referring to comments coming from the U.K., said Beijing had “made stern representations to Britain for the series of comments and actions they’ve made on Hong Kong.”

“We request they stop making these irresponsible statements, stop meddling in Hong Kong’s affairs and stop interfering in China’s internal affairs,” he said.

NPR’s Emily Feng in Beijing contributed to this report.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo (center) says the new capital city will be in East Kalimantan province on the island of Borneo. He’s seen on Monday with Vice President Jusuf Kalla (right) and Minister of Agriculture and Land Planning Sofyan Djalil.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo says his country will create a new capital city on the island of Borneo, revealing new details about his plan to move the central government out of Jakarta. The capital’s current location faces a number of problems, including the fact that it’s sinking.

Widodo’s announcement Monday comes months after he said he wanted to move the capital, seeking a place that can offer a break from Jakarta’s environmental challenges as well as its relentlessly gridlocked traffic.

While rising seawater levels from climate change are a widespread concern for island and coastal areas worldwide, experts say Jakarta has played a central role in its own predicament.

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“Jakarta’s problems are largely man-made,” NPR’s Merrit Kennedy reported earlier this year. “The area’s large population has extracted so much groundwater that it has impacted the ground levels, and many surface water resources are polluted.”

As it looked for a new capital, Indonesia’s state planning and development agency, called Bappenas, chose the Kalimantan site because it fit all the government’s criteria, “including being relatively free from earthquakes and volcanoes,” The Jakarta Post reports.

The new capital, which has yet to be named, would be in eastern Borneo, hundreds of miles northeast of Jakarta across the Java Sea. While the selected area is close to the cities of Balikpapan and Samarinda, the region is mostly known for its beaches and dense rainforests. Borneo’s lush jungles also form large national parks that are vital habitats for orangutans.

Widodo’s announcement has met with a broad range of reactions, from concerns about the environmental impact on Borneo to support — and suggestions that the president should focus more on Indonesia’s economy and its energy and health needs rather than on building a new capital.

It’s common for politicians to take office with promises to clean things up in the capital — to “drain the swamp.” But that rhetoric is both more literal and more complicated in Jakarta, which is seen as ” the fastest-sinking city in the world, with almost half of its area below sea level,” Kennedy reported.

With Jakarta’s situation predicted to grow increasingly dire, Widodo announced his new-capital initiative shortly after winning reelection in April. And while some on Borneo welcomed the idea that its infrastructure could get a boost, the idea of a central government moving in next door also raised concerns.

“I hope the city will develop and the education will become as good as in Jakarta,” one high school student told the BBC in April. “But all the land and forest that’s empty space now will be used. Kalimantan [the Indonesian portion of Borneo] is the lungs of the world, and I am worried we will lose the forest we have left.”

By building a new presence in Borneo’s East Kalimantan province, Indonesia would be putting its capital closer to several neighbors. Most of the island is Indonesian, but it’s also home to Brunei, and a chunk of its northern section is part of Malaysia.

If it all goes according to plan, Indonesia will carry out an idea that was first discussed decades ago, but one that has never gained enough traction. Widodo says the current project is the result of three years’ worth of intense study.

A detailed plan has not yet been announced about what the change could mean for Indonesia’s international partners — specifically, whether they will need to build new embassies or whether a diplomatic center might remain in Jakarta. The city is also home to the regional ASEAN Secretariat.

By contrast, Borneo’s status is far from the regional travel and business hub that defines Jakarta. And Widodo says it’s the weight of Jakarta’s combined status that makes it vital to move the capital. Seeking to bolster support for his plan, the president said via Twitter that as the hub of government and trade, Jakarta currently bears a burden that is too heavy.

Indonesia isn’t the only country looking to move its capital. In recent years, South Korea has been shifting administrative offices to Sejong — some 75 miles southeast of Seoul — after an initial plan to officially relocate the capital hit legal obstacles. Egypt is building a new capital that will sit in the desert between the Nile and the Suez Canal. And more than 50 years ago, Pakistan moved its capital from Karachi to Islamabad. Past examples also include Brazil’s creation of Brasília and Australia’s construction of Canberra.

Iran Seen Preparing For Space Launch

October 24, 2019 | News | No Comments

Satellite imagery from April 29 (left) shows the launch pad covered in debris. Imagery from August 24 (right) shows it with a fresh coat of paint.

In the latest indication that it may be readying an attempt to launch another space rocket, Iran has given its launch pad a fresh coat of paint.

A satellite image taken by the commercial company Planet shows the pad painted a bright blue. The image, taken August 24, was shared with NPR. Until this month, the launch pad at the Imam Khomeini Space Center had been sporting a burn scar from a previous failed launch attempt. It had also been covered in debris from a possible flash flood at the site this past spring.

“The Iranians have finished clearing off the pad, and they painted over the previous launch scar,” says Dave Schmerler, a senior research associate at the Middlebury Institute for International Studies who has analyzed the imagery.

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Other recent imagery has shown vehicle activity at a nearby building where Iran assembles its rockets. “We’re getting close to a launch, but exactly when that will happen I can’t tell you,” Schmerler says.

Iran’s press has reported that the government has three satellites that could be ready for launch by the end of the nation’s calendar year in March of 2020. A recent report from August suggests that one of the satellites, a communications satellite known as Nahid-1, is ready for launch now.

If a launch does take place, it would be the third such attempt this year. Launch attempts in January and February both ended in failure.

The Trump administration has insisted that Iran’s space rockets also advance the nation’s ballistic missile program. “Such vehicles incorporate technologies that are virtually identical and interchangeable with those used in ballistic missiles, including intercontinental ballistic missiles,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement following the failed launch attempt in January.

But Schmerler and other independent analysts are less sure of a clear connection between Iran’s liquid-fueled space rockets and its missile activities. The rocket the Iranians are likely to use, known as the Safir, does not contain advanced technology. It is a “relatively dated space-launch vehicle,” he says.

Thousands of demonstrators gather outside Houses of Parliament on Wednesday in London to protest against plans to suspend Parliament.

The leader of Britain’s House of Commons on Thursday called lawmakers opposed to the suspension of Parliament “phony” and questioned whether they have the “courage or the gumption” to change the law or bring down the government to avoid a no-deal Brexit.

Speaking to the BBC, Jacob Rees-Mogg made the comments a day after Queen Elizabeth II approved an extraordinary request from Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend Parliament, known as prorogation.

Prorogation leaves Parliament little time to take up Rees-Mogg’s challenge — either to pass a no-confidence motion against Johnson or to push back the Brexit date.

Lawmakers reconvene Sept. 3 but under prorogation will disband the following week. They return Oct. 14, just 17 days before Britain’s Oct. 31 deadline to leave the European Union.

In 2016, Britain voted in a referendum to leave the EU. Former Prime Minister Theresa May negotiated a divorce deal with the EU but Parliament rejected the agreement three times. The impasse ultimately brought down her government.

Meanwhile, Brexiteers have insisted that despite concerns over economic chaos, Britain must leave even without a deal.

“All these people who are wailing and gnashing of teeth know that there are two ways of doing what they want to do,” Rees-Mogg, a member of Johnson’s Conservative Party and a confirmed euroskeptic, told the broadcaster. “One, is to change the government and the other is to change the law.”

“If they don’t have either the courage or the gumption to do either of those then we will leave on the 31st of October in accordance with the referendum result,” he added.

Johnson’s move infuriated opposition politicians and sparked a strong reaction from many ordinary Britons who turned out in the streets.

Thousands of anti-Brexit protesters, some carrying signs that read “Stop the Coup,” gathered Wednesday night in Parliament Square. There were smaller demonstrations in Manchester, Cambridge, Cardiff, Edinburgh and Durham, according to the Evening Standard.

Protester Emma Cooper, 28, spoke to The Guardian. “I feel absolutely livid. I haven’t been to a protest for a long time,” she said. “What’s happening in this country and the right wing shift around the world is really worrying. I think Brexit is xenophobia extended to a bigger level.”

Well over 1 million people have also signed a petition against suspending Parliament.

Commons Speaker John Bercow, a hard-line “Remainer,” called Johnson’s move a “constitutional outrage.”

“At this early stage in his premiership,” he said, “the prime minister should be seeking to establish rather than undermine his democratic credentials and indeed his commitment to parliamentary democracy.”

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, wrote to the queen to protest Johnson’s move “in the strongest possible terms on behalf of my party and I believe all the other opposition parties are going to join in with this.”

Johnson, who became prime minister barely a month ago, holds a single-seat majority in Parliament, but some of his own party members oppose a no-deal Brexit.

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Kamala Harris on Monday unveiled a plan to achieve universal health care coverage by growing Medicare with the help of private insurers, an effort that splits the difference with her chief Democratic presidential rivals and equips the California senator with her own signature health care proposal ahead of this week’s debates.

“Medicare works,” Harris wrote in a Medium essay published Monday morning. “Now, let’s expand it to all Americans and give everyone access to comprehensive health care.”

Under "KamalaCare," which would be phased in over a decade, Harris has at last settled on a way to keep private health insurers in the fold after seesawing on the question since January — and she would do so by leaning on an existing and popular federal program.

Harris’ offering maintains her commitment to universal health care coverage — demanded by her party’s base — while lowering the temperature among the guardians of Obamacare who fear that overreaching would wipe out their hard-fought gains. Kathleen Sebelius, who served as secretary of Health and Human Services in the Obama administration and was consulted on Harris’ plan, blessed it as “a smart way to get to ‘Medicare for All’ where all individuals and employers can transition smoothly into a system that covers everyone.”

But Harris’ proposal skimps on myriad details, including the plan’s cost, and will likely still face skepticism from progressives — worried about propping up insurance companies and the slower pace of change — as well as from conservatives and deep-pocketed health care lobbyists staunchly opposed to any form of Medicare expansion.

Health care has consistently been a top issue — if not the leading concern — among voters nationally and in the key early voting states but has bitterly divided the Democratic primary.

Former Vice President Joe Biden, a top Obamacare defender, has called to preserve a role for private insurers while creating a government-run alternative, arguing millions of voters prefer to keep their private coverage. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont counters that all Americans should be enrolled in a single government-run plan, insisting that it’s the most efficient way to lower health care costs.

Throughout the campaign, Harris has publicly wavered on whether her health plan would eliminate private insurance, and the months of seeming reversals exposed her to bipartisan attacks and criticism that she risked looking inconsistent or, worse, coming off as pandering.

After raising her hand at June’s Democratic presidential debate, suggesting she favored abolishing private health insurance, Harris the next day said she had misinterpreted the question, which she took to mean giving up her own private plan to enroll in a government-run plan.

Seventy percent of Americans favor “Medicare for All” if given a choice between a government plan and private insurance, according to a recent NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll. But just 4 in 10 support a mandatory government plan for all.

Harris’ new plan breaks with her rivals who occupy the opposite poles of the debate by effectively proposing “Medicare Advantage for All” — permitting private insurers to continue selling plans, akin to the 2-decade-old offshoot of Medicare, in addition to letting Americans immediately buy into the traditional Medicare program and adding new benefits, like more mental health services. As a result, Americans would be able to choose between the public plan and certified private Medicare plans. Harris also said she would immediately enroll newborns and the uninsured, an effort to quickly get to universal coverage, if elected.

Harris warned of strict cost and quality standards on participating insurers, although she wasn’t specific about what those requirements would be.

“If they want to play by our rules, they can be in the system,” Harris wrote in the Medium post. “If not, they have to get out.”

About a third of current Medicare enrollees are covered through Medicare Advantage. The program for private insurers, launched under the Clinton administration and expanded under George W. Bush, has bipartisan appeal. Senior Trump administration officials have touted the benefits of Medicare Advantage even as they’ve mocked Sanders’ plan and Biden’s public option — sometimes in the same speech.

In an effort to reduce disruption, Harris would have her reforms phase in over a decade; for comparison, Sanders’ plan has a more ambitious four-year timetable. She also laidout proposals intended to boost rural health, lower maternal mortality and reduce the high cost of prescription drugs. Private insurers could continue to sell supplemental insurance for cosmetic surgery and other niche services.

In a statement, Sebelius called Harris’ proposal “innovative” and said it built on the progress of Obamacare while expanding on the promise of universal coverage through the Medicare system.

Andy Slavitt, a former Obama administration official who oversaw Medicare, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act, added in an interview: “Sen. Harris’ plan is an effort to balance idealism and pragmatism. If she explains it right, there’s something here for Bernie supporters and Biden supporters and definitely people who voted for Trump.”

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Harris’ plan has the support of senior officials in the Obama administration and includes principles supported by advocacy groups like Families USA, which helped lead the organizing effort to pass the ACA in 2009 and into 2010.

However, some progressives have called for the outright elimination of private insurance, saying companies have incentives to maximize their profits at the expense of patients. Private insurers have faced repeated allegations of defrauding Medicare Advantage of billions of dollars.

Harris’ 10-year timetable invites uncertainty, given that a term-limited Harris would be out of office and a future administration could reverse her plan.

The health care proposal will also meet resistance from lobbyists for hospitals, doctors, pharmaceutical companies and other major health care sectors, worried that her plan would cut their clients’ pay. Dozens of prominent health care advocacy groups have joined a coalition that so far has opposed all forms of Medicare expansion.

But it could stave off anticipated confrontations with the second Democratic presidential debate of the year approaching. Biden and aides in recent weeks telegraphed that they plan to draw a sharper contrast with Harris, in part over the question of how she would fund the multitrillion-dollar cost of universal coverage.

Harris, a Medicare for All supporter who came out for Sanders’ single-payer health care bill two years ago, has been distancing herself from his $3.2 trillion plan and how he might pay for it. Campaigning on her own signature tax cut for working families and the middle class, Harris recently stressed that her health care vision would not further hike taxes on those Americans, a position some dismissed as unrealistic.

In her Medium post, Harris partially addressed the longstanding funding questions. She praised Sanders’ financing suggestions for his Medicare for All proposal, saying he’d presented “good options,” particularly making the nation’s highest earners and corporations pay more through more progressive income, payroll and estate taxes.

But she took aim at her rival’s potential tax on households making more than $29,000 — saying it “hits the middle class too hard” — and instead called to exempt households making less than $100,000 as well as some middle-class families in high-cost areas.

Harris said she would tax stock trades at 0.2 percent, bond trades at 0.1 percent and derivative transactions at 0.002 percent to make up the difference.

“Think of it like this: that’s a $2 fee on a $1,000 trade by investors and big banks,” she wrote, to raise $2 trillion over 10 years.

Where are my dragons? Get your fix with these five fire-breathing reads.

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The end of Game of Thrones — not to mention the long gap between installments of George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire — has left a smoldering, dragon-shaped hole in the hearts of fantasy fans. Dragons have been a staple of fantasy literature since The Lord of the Rings, and everyone from Ursula K. Le Guin and Anne McCaffrey to Robin Hobb and Naomi Novik have expanded upon the collective mythology of our favorite giant lizards. There’s something primal about the appeal of dragons: their beauty, their majesty, their mystique, their bottomless symbolism. But what will fill the current void in dragon fandom? Luckily, this year so far has seen a raft of new, dragon-centric novels that explore these creatures on an epic scale — sometimes traditionally, sometimes radically, but all with fire-breathing fabulousness.

The Ruin of Kings

by Jenn Lyons


Hardcover, 557 pages, Tor Books, $24.99, published February 5 2019 | purchase

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Blood of an Exile

by Brian Naslund


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Dragonslayer

by Duncan M. Hamilton


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Turning Darkness into Light

by Marie Brennan


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The Bone Ships

by R. J. Barker


Paperback, 432 pages, Orbit, $15.99, published September 24 2019 | purchase

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Jason Heller is a Hugo Award-winning editor and author of the new book Strange Stars: David Bowie, Pop Music, and the Decade Sci-Fi Exploded. He’s on Twitter: @jason_m_heller

Sen. Cory Booker said Thursday that he felt disrespected by Joe Biden’s counterattack after Booker condemned the former vice president for his remarks about working with segregationist senators.

The flap started when Biden told a group of wealthy donors that his past work with segregationist senators was an example of "civility" that’s missing from politics today.

Booker was one of the first 2020 Democratic candidates to rebuke Biden’s comments, saying "he is wrong" to use the senators "as examples of how to bring our country together" and that Biden should apologize.

Biden bristled at the comments, telling reporters, "Apologize for what? Cory should apologize." He added, "He knows better. There’s not a racist bone in my body."

Biden later called Booker to smooth things over, but the tension was still evident on Thursday when Booker was asked at a Washington Post Live event whether he felt disrespected by Biden’s dismissal.

"Of course I did," Booker said. "How many times have we all in our lives, who are some kind of ‘other,’ dealt with mansplaining or dealt with condemning remarks?"

Booker said the country needs a leader who is an "agent" of healing, reconciliation and truth-telling. He added that he was "stunned" it took Biden so long to apologize for championing the controversial 1994 crime bill, a measure fellow presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders also supported. The bill, Booker said, put mass incarceration "on steroids" and prompted many caucus members to later acknowledge voting for the bill was a bad decision.

The New Jersey senator also reiterated his disappointment when Biden asked him to apologize, saying the party needs a presidential nominee who shows vulnerability, not one who would "fall into a defensive crouch and try to shift blame."

"I’m happy that he came forward and apologized, but a presidential nominee shouldn’t need that kind of lesson," Booker said.
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G-7 nations pledged millions to help Amazon countries fight wildfires, but Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said Tuesday that he’s not interested unless he gets an apology from French President Emmanuel Macron.

Brazil says it will reject an offer of at least $22 million from the rich countries in the Group of Seven to help fight fires sweeping through the Amazon rainforest. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro says he doesn’t want the money — unless it comes with an apology from French President Emmanuel Macron.

Bolsonaro and Macron have engaged in a days-long spat after the French leader used the G-7 summit this week to call for action to protect the Amazon and said the fires are a world environmental crisis that Bolsonaro has allowed to worsen. He also said that Bolsonaro, a climate change skeptic, had lied about his effort to combat deforestation.

Bolsonaro responded angrily, saying Macron had insulted him and was trying to undermine Brazil’s sovereignty by intervening in the Amazon.

“This squabble is infuriating Bolsonaro’s critics,” NPR’s Philip Reeves reports from Rio de Janeiro. “They say he should fight the fires — not the French.”

On Monday, Bolsonaro said in a tweet that he won’t accept what he called Macron’s “attacks.” He also accused Macron of treating Brazil “as if we were a colony or no man’s land.”

In an interview on French TV, Macron later referred to the Amazon as “the lungs of the planet” and pledged that the G-7 countries would help Brazil balance its economic development with environmental concerns. In an aside addressed to Bolsonaro, he added, “But we cannot allow you to destroy everything.”

On Tuesday morning, Bolsonaro said Macron would have to take back all the things he said about him before he would even consider the offer of monetary aid from members of the G-7: the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom.

Bolsonaro made those remarks to reporters in Brasilia shortly after the website G1 reported that the president’s chief of staff, Onyx Lorenzoni, had rejected the offer outright.

“Thanks, but perhaps these resources are more relevant to reforesting Europe,” Lorenzoni was quoted as saying. Referring to the recent Notre Dame blaze in Paris, he went on to suggest that if Macron cannot “avoid a predictable fire in a church,” he might not have much to teach to Brazil.

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President Trump came to Bolsonaro’s defense on Tuesday, saying via Twitter, “He is working very hard on the Amazon fires and in all respects doing a great job for the people of Brazil — Not easy.”

In reply, Bolsonaro thanked Trump and wrote, “The fake news campaign built against our sovereignty will not work.”

Macron made the devastating fires in the Amazon a key point for the G-7 summit even before meetings began in Biarritz, France. “The ocean and the forest that burns in the Amazon call us. We have to answer them,” he said, adding, “The time is no longer for words, but for deeds.”

The offer of money from the G-7 nations also has drawn attention over its modest size — because it is coming from some of the world’s largest economies and because of the task it is meant to accomplish.

“It’s really only symbolic,” Nigel Sizer, the chief program officer at the nonprofit Rainforest Alliance, told NPR. “It’s less than Americans spend on popcorn in a typical day.”

In that light, Sizer said, it’s not surprising that Brazil has rejected the offer. And he added that the problem is partly political, as well.

“The fact is that Brazil has the resources and the expertise to address this challenge,” Sizer said. “Since the Bolsonaro government came into power at the beginning of this year, they have systematically defunded their environmental protection agencies.”

The shocking losses in the Amazon rainforest have prompted intense reactions globally. In addition to the formal G-7 offer, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has offered to send the affected nations 10 million pounds (around $12.2 million), and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau offered to send CA$15 million (around $11.2 million) and water bomber planes to fight the fires.

As awareness has spread on social media and elsewhere, donations have poured in from all over, Sizer said.

“The people of the world actually are pledging more resources than the G-7 has been committing,” he said. “We’ve seen millions and millions of dollars coming in.”

Actor and environmentalist Leonardo DiCaprio has also stepped in, with his Earth Alliance group creating a $5 million emergency Amazon fund to help indigenous communities and others who are working to protect the Amazon’s prodigious biodiversity from being destroyed.

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